I'd be more impressed to see an article on someone who has a max possible score on GFWL which is about to be shut down, and cannot even be obtained anymore (in a short time) unless you started some years ago as some points are no longer available.
I'd be more impressed to see an article on someone who has a max possible score on GFWL which is about to be shut down, and cannot even be obtained anymore (in a short time) unless you started some years ago as some points are no longer available.
What may surprise some North Americans, is that Pizza Hut (same company) is just like this here in China.
You haven't been a member for very long then. In the past, people generally didn't have mice, and not many games even supported them until later in the IBM compatible PC DOS era. e.g. my first PC, and the mouse neither I nor anyone I knew had: www.c64-wiki.com/index.php/Mouse all games were played with KB/Joystick
"Q-pon"
The master race has been using controllers with PC gaming since the 1970's. If you haven't figured out how to plug one in to your PC yet, you're not ready to be a member.
Console gamers are nitwits.
Ah, more likely, he is a console gamer still using a last gen Xbox 360.
Ah, one of those people that post without actually watching the video.
People need to "get comfortable" with seeing better graphics?
Why would you want to stand at a kiosk to play games at home.
Isn't TOS also the shortest one?
These new revised regulations haven't gone into effect yet and are currently up for public consideration until the 24th of this month. The proposed regulations also include things that actually make sense, such as no advertising for tobacco products. Who knows, maybe these new proposed regulations are geared towards…
Ads on CCTV are heavily regulated and overall in line with the government's wishes, and ads on other channels usually employ ads that favor whatever business their owners they are in. For example, Beijing Kaku airs ads about its retail toy stores and after-school cram learning programs.
Chinese television is heavily regulated, and children's broadcasting only shows up on a few channels; either the official China Central Television Youth Channel or a dedicated children's channel, like Beijing TV's Kaku.
In regards to video game advertising on Chinese TV, unless someone has cable, there pretty much isn't any. Most video game-related advertising in China is found, well, online.
Posted on the State Council's legal affairs website last week, the new proposed revisions for advertising are directed towards video games and children. The said proposals aim to remove and prevent video game advertising in textbooks, school buses, school uniforms, and programming geared towards children from…
I guess someone in Nintendo Japan finally heard you can use Wii online with Dolphin emulator....
Because here they are sold as "new", not "refurbished with 3rd party parts", at full retail price.
Then why did you post a pic of a PC game?
So you sold Skyrim after already having played it and thereby activating the serial code?